The phenomenal growth of personal installment credit over the past forty years has generated inevitable pressures for regulatory reform of consumer credit markets. Much of the impetus for consumer protection has stemmed from the perceived abuses that mark the process of coercive collection upon default. Some of these abuses have been identified, quite properly, as the sort of deceptive or fraudulent practices often associated with industries experiencing rapid growth. But other creditor remedies, though troublesome to many observers, cannot be as easily characterized. For example, many critics have challenged the common practice of self-help repossession and resale of consumer goods by secured creditors. Repossession belongs to a family of ...
In the span of a generation, consumer credit has reshaped the financial lives of millions of America...
This Article takes a fresh look at the power of courts and creditors to force debtors to repay their...
This Article takes a fresh look at the power of courts and creditors to force debtors to repay their...
The phenomenal growth of personal installment credit over the past forty years has generated inevita...
This Article suggests that the conventional analysis is premised on an unduly narrow conception of t...
The draftsmen of the Uniform Consumer Credit Code (herein- after the Credit Code) have thus far dire...
This study investigates the values comumers place on restrictions of creditor remedies. The unique d...
The Cost of Credit: Protecting Consumers in a Regulated Fringe Credit Market proposes that federal f...
Among the many by-products of the phenomenal growth of consumer credit in the last two decades has b...
Well-intentioned critics point to the absence of banks in poor communities as the cause of the spraw...
This study investigates the values consumers place on restrictions of creditor remedies. The unique ...
The authors examine the ways in which the credit crunch has simulated both immediate regulatory init...
In September 1971, over 130 billion dollars of consumer credit was outstanding, or over six hundred ...
Prior to the passage of the Truth-in-Lending Act (TILA) in 1968, consumers were vulnerable to many d...
Congress recently enacted amendments to the Bankruptcy Code that possess the overarching theme of cr...
In the span of a generation, consumer credit has reshaped the financial lives of millions of America...
This Article takes a fresh look at the power of courts and creditors to force debtors to repay their...
This Article takes a fresh look at the power of courts and creditors to force debtors to repay their...
The phenomenal growth of personal installment credit over the past forty years has generated inevita...
This Article suggests that the conventional analysis is premised on an unduly narrow conception of t...
The draftsmen of the Uniform Consumer Credit Code (herein- after the Credit Code) have thus far dire...
This study investigates the values comumers place on restrictions of creditor remedies. The unique d...
The Cost of Credit: Protecting Consumers in a Regulated Fringe Credit Market proposes that federal f...
Among the many by-products of the phenomenal growth of consumer credit in the last two decades has b...
Well-intentioned critics point to the absence of banks in poor communities as the cause of the spraw...
This study investigates the values consumers place on restrictions of creditor remedies. The unique ...
The authors examine the ways in which the credit crunch has simulated both immediate regulatory init...
In September 1971, over 130 billion dollars of consumer credit was outstanding, or over six hundred ...
Prior to the passage of the Truth-in-Lending Act (TILA) in 1968, consumers were vulnerable to many d...
Congress recently enacted amendments to the Bankruptcy Code that possess the overarching theme of cr...
In the span of a generation, consumer credit has reshaped the financial lives of millions of America...
This Article takes a fresh look at the power of courts and creditors to force debtors to repay their...
This Article takes a fresh look at the power of courts and creditors to force debtors to repay their...